- 3,802
- 95
Homework Statement
If z=6e^{3i} then find the exact answer for Re(z^4)
The Attempt at a Solution
What I'm having trouble with is the fact that it's not in the usual form z=re^{i\theta} where \theta is some multiple of \pi. So I guess in a way I'm dealing with a not so nice answer.
Anyway, z^4=6^4e^{12i}
Now restrict the radian angle between -\pi<\theta\leq \pi we take away 4\pi. So our angle is now 12-4\pi.
For Re(z4) I suppose we take 6^4cos(12-4\pi)
Is this the exact answer I'm looking for?
Oh and while I was working on this, I tried to go down this road and can't figure out why it's wrong:
e^{3i}=\left(e^{2\pi i}\right)^{\frac{3}{2\pi}}=1^{\frac{3}{2\pi}}=1
Of course this is not correct since the answer to the original expression is not 1. May anyone shed some light on this?